The Greatest Event in Television History (Adult Swim, 12 a.m.) — The first special, with Jon Hamm and Adam Scott as Simon AND Simon, was brilliant, so expect the same for tonight’s, a shot-for-shot remake of Hart to Hart‘s opening credits, starring Scott, Amy Poehler, and Horatio Sanz.

NBA Finals: Spurs at Heat (ABC, 9 p.m.) — Or, with all the LeBron coverage, an excuse for Spurs fans to complain that Tim Duncan is THE MOST UNDERRATED PLAYER IN BASKETBALL HISTORY, even though he’s perfectly rated.

In The Flesh (BBC America, 10 p.m.) — Series premiere. Now that Orphan Black and Doctor Who are gone, you should strongly think about making In the Flesh, a miniseries about rehabilitated zombies, your one BBC America show. Or else British zombies will eat your face, with a side of crumpets.

LATE-NIGHT GUESTS: Vince Vaughn, Andy Kindler, and Queens of the Stone Age on Letterman; Henry Cavill and She & Him on Leno; Jonah Hill, Arvind Mahankali, and the Lonely Island on Kimmel; Betty White and Sarah Paulson on Ferguson; Christopher Meloni, Cat Deeley, and Broken Social Scene on Fallon; Danny McBride on Conan; Jon Stewart’s final show until September; and Stephen King, John Mellencamp, and T Bone Burnett on Colbert.

Duncan is the second greatest player of his era, a minuscule hair behind Kobe, and very few rate him that high. Maybe it’s because he isn’t flashy, doesn’t play a glamour position, and never won consecutive championships, but Duncan is probably the most under-appreciated player in NBA history (or at least recent history).

@Thanksgiving Chimp Nope. Duncan is 100% definitely better than Kobe. No questions asked. If Duncan had a player the level of prime Shaq on his team he’d have won way more than 3 championships with him. Mostly because he wouldn’t have been a little baby and made the Spurs trade this theoretical player away. Anyone who tells you they’d rather have Kobe over Duncan is a damn fool.

Duncan is one of the most complete players in NBA history. The dude can in a star in almost ever facet of the game. And he does it with little to no flash or arrogance, which a trait that few NBA superstars embrace anymore. You can still be the best player in the league and not be a complete dipshit every time a microphone is near.